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J Physiol Vol 481, Issue Pt 1 pp 207-215
Copyright © 1994 by The Physiological Society
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Regional alternans in relaxation and the onset of pulsus alternans in the heart of the anaesthetized pig.

C F Murphy, M J Lab, S M Horner, D J Dick and F G Harrison

British Heart Foundation Cardiac Arrhythmia Research Group, Department of Physiology, Charing Cross and Westminster Medical School, London, UK.

1. The factors leading to the alternation in myocardial contractility believed primarily responsible for pulsus alternans are not known. We examine regional and global contraction patterns in the in situ heart at stimulation rates just below the threshold for pulsus alternans to determine if events occurring in the transition to alternans can give clues to cellular mechanisms. 2. Twelve pigs were anaesthetized, the chest wall removed and regional contraction measured in three areas of the left ventricle using tripodal strain gauges. We analysed regional and global dynamics during right atrial pacing at cycle lengths 50-150 ms greater than the threshold for pulsus alternans. 3. At pacing cycle lengths 50 ms greater than that required to produce pulsus alternans seven of twelve pigs showed alternans in the maximum rate of ventricular pressure decay but none showed alternans in the maximum rate of pressure rise. Pigs showing alternans in global relaxation were more likely to show alternans in regional contracility (P < 0.05). 4. Twenty-six of the thirty-six areas sampled showed alternans in end-diastolic length at pacing rates below the threshold for pulsus alternans. In fifteen of these areas alternation in end-diastolic length occurred in the absence of alternans in measures of contractility. 5. Alternans in global measures of relaxation may simply be a manifestation of regional alternans in contractility. It is therefore not appropriate, from global haemodynamic data, to suppose that alternans in relaxation is the primary abnormality in the generation of pulsus alternans.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)




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